“I have to stand up for myself,” Andrews, now with Fox Sports, told jurors. “This could happen to anyone. I want the Nashville Marriott to be held responsible.

“I wanted to be respected, I just wanted to be the girl next door who loved sports. Now I’m the girl with the hotel scandal. It’s embarrassing.”

Andrews said she’s aware that the video will be on the Internet “until the day I die” — but back in July 2009, she was hoping to get it removed before it could go viral.

“My biggest fear was that the longer it was on the Internet, it was going to blow up and blow up and blow up and go viral and get page views and be really bad,” she said.

Then there were the many accusations that it was all a publicity stunt meant to further her career, which “ripped me apart,” she said.

“Nobody knew it was a stalker,” Andrews explained. “Everybody just thought it was a publicity stunt to get more fans.’’

She said even the FBI seemed skeptical about her at first.

“My dad and I flew to LA to go meet with the FBI. They wanted to look me in the eye and see if I had anything to do with this. I remember my dad saying, ‘There’s a female there, too, and she’s going to try to sniff you out to see if you’re telling the truth.’

“I went and I threw up, and I came back in . . . They believed me when I came back after I got sick.”

Even now, sports fans still make obscene comments about her at games — and tweet stills from the video to her Twitter account, Andrews said.

“I’m not gonna say what I hear, but it’s, ‘I’ve seen your this. I’ve seen your that,’ ” she testified.

“It happens all the time, every single game. People tweet me, ‘I should pay the Marriott because it made me famous.’ ”

Andrews is still “so angry” the Nashville hotel never called to tell her that Barrett had requested to stay in a room next to hers.

“This could have been stopped,” Andrews insisted. “The Nashville Marriott could have just called me . . . And I would have called the cops.”